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The venerable Armed Forces YMCA

Padres in Yuma, how head shops got here, Ace Parking's Jones family, San Diego Zoo has a lot of semen, SDG&E struggles

Doors of the Y. At night the street explodes with movement. - Image by Jim Coit
Doors of the Y. At night the street explodes with movement.

Downtown's YMCA – doors always open

In 1944 alone, almost eight million people came through the front doors. A continual flow of humanity, 22.000 per day, filed through them. “They say it was a sea of white hats,” adds Barbara Keeney. "The story goes that a young woman came from out of town looking for her boyfriend. She couldn’t even get inside the doors to find him, so she just sat on the front steps and cried.”

By Jeff Smith, Feb. 5, 1981 Read full article

“Having the San Diego team do their spring training in Yuma is one of the best things to happen to this town.”

Everyone's happy with the Padres in Arizona

"Most of the Padres are so young, kids almost. The only thing that makes me upset is when one or two of them will say something really disrespectful about the town here. Some do this, not all. They say things like there isn't much to do here, or that it’s in the middle of nowhere. In a way, this town chooses its own. All desert towns do that. If you don’t like 115-degree heat, you’ll know soon enough."

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By Jeff Smith, Apr. 17, 1980 Read full article

Vic McCully: “I probably have the messiest store in town.”

The genesis of San Diego's head shops

After the economic slump of 1974. the poster market cooled considerably, forcing the closure of shops that relied on it. And now the poster is back, but it’s changed. Whereas in the late Sixties it was a medium for an opinion, today it seems to be aesthetics. The Black and other head shops sell a lot of nature scenics, sports moments, pin-up girls, and surrealism. And black lights are passe.

By Neal Matthews, Sept. 6, 1979 Read full article

At the community concourse, Jones installed devices to keep track of where the cars were parking.

Park there, pay here

The management of parking lots has much to do with deterring cheaters. Ace Auto Parks has found that at an unattended lot, one person out of two declines to pay. But the parking lot company doesn’t pay anything, either, when it calls to have an offending car towed away. The towing company is glad to have the business, as the current charge for a passenger car is twenty-eight dollars,

By Joe Applegate, Nov. 22, 1979 Read full article

Kurt Benirschke: “The answer depends very much upon the balance to be struck between the Catholic Church and the people.... you can’t just proliferate forever."

The animals' hour

Kurt Benirschke: “We have too many people, and we’re killing the wildlife,’’ he says flatly. “I feel very strongly that the reason why we have so many people is because we understand human reproductive physiology. . . . I feel it’s time we translate this to the other species that we ’re in the process of rubbing out.”

By Jeannette DeWyze, Nov. 15, 1979 Read full article

San Onofre. SDG&E maintains that its financial plight is due to circumstances beyond its control.

The dimming of SDG&E

SDG&E first began actively pursuing the construction of Sundesert — a proposed 1900 megawatt nuclear power plant to be built near the Colorado River, seventeen miles south of Blythe — in 1972. The company was getting into a financial bind due to the rising price of oil and the continued rapid population growth in its service area, which was greater than the company’s ability to keep up with it

By Gordon Smith, Nov. 8, 1979 Read full story

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Doors of the Y. At night the street explodes with movement. - Image by Jim Coit
Doors of the Y. At night the street explodes with movement.

Downtown's YMCA – doors always open

In 1944 alone, almost eight million people came through the front doors. A continual flow of humanity, 22.000 per day, filed through them. “They say it was a sea of white hats,” adds Barbara Keeney. "The story goes that a young woman came from out of town looking for her boyfriend. She couldn’t even get inside the doors to find him, so she just sat on the front steps and cried.”

By Jeff Smith, Feb. 5, 1981 Read full article

“Having the San Diego team do their spring training in Yuma is one of the best things to happen to this town.”

Everyone's happy with the Padres in Arizona

"Most of the Padres are so young, kids almost. The only thing that makes me upset is when one or two of them will say something really disrespectful about the town here. Some do this, not all. They say things like there isn't much to do here, or that it’s in the middle of nowhere. In a way, this town chooses its own. All desert towns do that. If you don’t like 115-degree heat, you’ll know soon enough."

Sponsored
Sponsored

By Jeff Smith, Apr. 17, 1980 Read full article

Vic McCully: “I probably have the messiest store in town.”

The genesis of San Diego's head shops

After the economic slump of 1974. the poster market cooled considerably, forcing the closure of shops that relied on it. And now the poster is back, but it’s changed. Whereas in the late Sixties it was a medium for an opinion, today it seems to be aesthetics. The Black and other head shops sell a lot of nature scenics, sports moments, pin-up girls, and surrealism. And black lights are passe.

By Neal Matthews, Sept. 6, 1979 Read full article

At the community concourse, Jones installed devices to keep track of where the cars were parking.

Park there, pay here

The management of parking lots has much to do with deterring cheaters. Ace Auto Parks has found that at an unattended lot, one person out of two declines to pay. But the parking lot company doesn’t pay anything, either, when it calls to have an offending car towed away. The towing company is glad to have the business, as the current charge for a passenger car is twenty-eight dollars,

By Joe Applegate, Nov. 22, 1979 Read full article

Kurt Benirschke: “The answer depends very much upon the balance to be struck between the Catholic Church and the people.... you can’t just proliferate forever."

The animals' hour

Kurt Benirschke: “We have too many people, and we’re killing the wildlife,’’ he says flatly. “I feel very strongly that the reason why we have so many people is because we understand human reproductive physiology. . . . I feel it’s time we translate this to the other species that we ’re in the process of rubbing out.”

By Jeannette DeWyze, Nov. 15, 1979 Read full article

San Onofre. SDG&E maintains that its financial plight is due to circumstances beyond its control.

The dimming of SDG&E

SDG&E first began actively pursuing the construction of Sundesert — a proposed 1900 megawatt nuclear power plant to be built near the Colorado River, seventeen miles south of Blythe — in 1972. The company was getting into a financial bind due to the rising price of oil and the continued rapid population growth in its service area, which was greater than the company’s ability to keep up with it

By Gordon Smith, Nov. 8, 1979 Read full story

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The latest copy of the Reader

Please enjoy this clickable Reader flipbook. Linked text and ads are flash-highlighted in blue for your convenience. To enhance your viewing, please open full screen mode by clicking the icon on the far right of the black flipbook toolbar.

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Trophy truck crushes four at Baja 1000

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